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First Report of Shining Willow as a Host Plant for Septoria musiva. N.
Feau and L. Bernier, Centre de Recherche en Biologie Forestière, Université
Laval, Sainte-Foy (QC), Canada, G1K 7P4. Plant Dis. 88:770, 2004; published
on-line as D-2004-0504-01N, 2004. Accepted for publication 22 April 2004.
During the summer of 2001, leaf spots resembling those caused by Septoria
musiva Peck. were observed on shining willow (Salix lucida Mühl.
subsp. lucida) at Leclerville, Québec, Canada (46°34'19"N,
71°59'35"W). Affected leaves had brown, necrotic leaf spots (>5mm in
diameter) surrounded by a darker brown halo. Conidia were cylindrical, straight
to curved with 1 to 4 septa, 28 to 54 × 3.5 to 4 µm, and were produced
in pycnidia located on the abaxial surface in the center of the leaf spots. The
causal agent of this disease was successfully isolated by germinating the
conidia on corn meal agar that was supplemented with streptomycin (50mg/ml) and
chloramphenicol (300mg/ml) and followed with the transfer of the germinated
conidia to potato dextrose agar. Leaf symptoms and morphology matched those of S.
musiva, the cause of leaf spot and stem canker of hybrid poplars in North
America (2,4). The internal transcribed spacers and the 5.8S portion of the rDNA
were amplified using PCR with the ITS1 (5(prime)-TCC GTA GGT GAA CCT GCG
G-3(prime)) and
ITS2 (5(prime)-GCT GCG TTC TTC ATC GAT GC-3(prime)) primer pair on total genomic DNA
extracted from a pure culture of the pathogen. The rDNA sequence obtained
(GenBank Accession No. AY555277) had 100% identity at 506 base positions with
the ITS1, 5.8S, and ITS2 of three S. musiva isolates from Québec and one
from Wisconsin (GenBank Accession Nos. AY549464 to AY549467). To test for
pathogenicity, excised leaf disks from plants propagated by softwood cuttings of
the source plant and from one hybrid poplar clone (Populus maximowiczii
× P. xjackii) were inoculated with 3 µl of a suspension of
ground mycelium or sterile water (control). Disks were placed in a 24-well
tissue culture plate with 1 ml of distilled water per well and incubated in a
growth room maintained at 22°C with a 16-h photoperiod. After 1 month, symptoms
were similar to those previously observed. Isolates collected from shining
willow or hybrid poplar were able to induce S. musiva leaf spot symptoms
on leaf disks excised from shining willow or the hybrid poplar clone. From
symptomatic leaf disks, S. musiva was consistently reisolated. To our
knowledge, this is the first report of S. musiva on a member of the genus
Salix. S. didyma, S. salicicola, and S. salicina
have been reported from leaves of species of Salix (1,3). Only a vague
morphological description of S. didyma was found (3). Moreover, conidia
of S. salicicola (20 to 50 × 2.5 to 3.5 µm) and S. salicina (40
to 60 µm long, unspecified width) overlap dimensions of S. musiva
conidia (1). There is a need to reexamine the relationships between these
species of Septoria. Evidently, the complete host range of S. musiva
is not yet known.
References: (1) L. Lanier et al. Mycologie et Pathologie Forestières.
Masson. Paris, 1978. (2) M. E. Ostry. Eur. J. For. Pathol. 17:158, 1987. (3) P.
A. Saccardo. Sylloge fungurum omnium hucusque cognitorum. Patavii: Sumptibus
Auctoris, 1882. (4) L. J. Spielman et al. Plant Dis. 70:968, 1986.
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